THIRTY-THREE


Steve’s smile didn’t survive his encounter with Fiona. When he walked into her office, she was staring blankly at her computer screen, hands linked behind her head. “Isn’t it a lovely day?” he said blithely, settling on her sofa.

Fiona looked at him as if he’d gone mad. “It is?”

“I think so,” he said cheerfully. “I’ve just had a very interesting encounter with Terry Fowler.”

“Oh good,” Fiona said absently. “She’s very efficient. I’m sure she’ll do an excellent job for you.” Her voice tailed off and she frowned at the wall above his head.

“Earth to Fiona…Is there anybody home?”

“I’m sorry, Steve, I didn’t sleep much last night. I’m…a bit distracted.”

“You wanted to see me about something?” he reminded her.

Fiona scowled and squeezed the bridge of her nose between her finger and thumb. “I know. It all made perfect sense when I left the message, but now…Well, I don’t know if I’m overreacting.”

Fiona this distracted was too unfamiliar an experience for Steve to take lightly. “Let’s hear it,” he said. “Then we can both decide.”

She nodded. “Makes as much sense as anything else. I woke up in the middle of the night. You know, the way I do sometimes. No obvious reason, but I couldn’t get back to sleep. So I went upstairs to surf the web for a while, and I ended up in a chat room where people were discussing the Jane Elias murder. And the general consensus seemed to be that the Garda have arrested the wrong man.”

Fiona took a deep breath. “Now, I know you have a fairly low opinion of the kind of people who hang around in news groups in the middle of the night in cyberspace, but a couple of the people who had posted actually know this guy and they’re saying he just doesn’t have what it takes to plan or to carry out so complex a scheme. Now, if the police do have the wrong man and if Jane’s murder was nothing to do with her relationship with her Garda Siochana lover, then logic suggests that the same person might have murdered Jane Elias and Drew Shand.”

“That’s reaching, Fi, and you know it. Different countries? Totally different MO and no signature that we know of?”

“There is a signature of sorts, Steve. Both Drew and Jane were award-winning authors who wrote serial killer thrillers that have been successfully adapted for TV or film. And they were both killed in ways that mirror deaths that are described in the very books that were adapted.” Fiona was focused now, her previous abstraction history.

“It’s not a conventional signature,” was the only protest Steve could find.

“I know. But I’ve been working another case — the Spanish one — with an unconventional signature, and I suppose that’s why I’m probably more open to the idea than I normally would be. So, humour me. Just for the sake of argument, let’s say it’s a possibility that the two crimes have the same perpetrator.”

Steve nodded. “OK. Out of purely academic interest, let’s see where that takes us.”

“Where it takes us is that Georgia Lester is missing. Having had at least one death threat letter which, when she discovered Kit had also had one, scared her more than a little. Kit, who knows her as well as anyone, seems to think the papers are right and she’s gone to ground as some kind of bizarre publicity stunt. You said last night it’s possible she’s been abducted. Either of these may be the case. For all I know, the police are negotiating with a kidnapper as we speak. That’s something I imagine you could find out with relative ease if you were minded to. But there is another possibility.”

“I have a sinking feeling I know where you’re heading with this,” Steve said.

“I think Georgia could be the third victim of a serial killer. If that’s the case, then for the signature to hold, it would follow that she’s been murdered in the manner of one of the victims in a serial killer novel. Agreed?”

Steve decided to go along with Fiona for the time being. “Theoretically, yes.”

“After I’d been on-line last night, I checked out Georgia’s output. She’s only published one strictly serial killer novel, And Ever More Shall Be So. Which was made into a film. She’s an award winner she’s won the Crime Writers’ Association Gold Dagger for best crime novel of the year twice. She fits all the criteria, Steve. So last night, I skimmed the book.” Fiona paused, pushing her hair back from her face, revealing dark smudges beneath her eyes.

She continued, her voice now the calm, dispassionate tone of the lecturer imparting information. “The killer in And Ever More Shall Be So does abduct his victims. He uses the trick of pretending to have broken down in a country lane, but in broad daylight so they won’t be suspicious of him. Then he takes the victims back to his lair, where he strangles them. Finally he skins and dismembers them and wraps them up like joints of meat.”

Steve stared at Fiona for a long moment. It was a grisly prospect, but if he accepted her basic premise, it was an inevitable conclusion. “And you think this might be what’s happened to Georgia Lester?”

Fiona looked him straight in the eye. “I’m scared shitless that this is what has happened to Georgia. Tell me I’m being paranoid here, Steve.”

“You’re the psychologist, Fi. You know it’s only paranoia when it’s groundless. What you’re telling me might be pretty far-fetched, but it’s not entirely without foundation.” Steve leaned forward, his elbows on his knees, his hands clasped. However sceptical he was trying to sound, part of him was entirely convinced by Fiona’s thesis. “In the book, what does he do with the remains?”

“The killer’s a wholesale butcher in the town where his victims live. He’s got a big freezer that’s supposedly obsolete. He keeps it padlocked shut. That’s where he puts his packages of human flesh. So if I’m right, the logical place to look for Georgia Lester right now would be Smithfield Market. They live in the City, you see, her and Anthony.”

Steve closed his eyes. He wondered just how he was going to convince the detectives searching for Georgia Lester that they were going to need a search warrant for Smithfield Market. “One more question,” he finally said. “Do you think there’s a connection with the death threat letters?”

Fiona shrugged. “I don’t know. My first reaction was that the writer of the letters wasn’t a killer. There’s no boasting about the murders in any of the letters I’ve seen, which I’d expect if the letter-writer was the killer. And generally speaking, people who write anonymous threatening letters have a different mind-set from those who actually kill. But the more this goes on, the less certain I feel about trusting my judgement. If there is someone out there killing writers at the same time as someone else is sending those same people death threats, it’s hard to believe it’s pure coincidence.”

“We don’t know whether Jane Elias or Drew Shand had any letters similar to the ones sent to Kit and the others, though, do we? And the Garda told me they hadn’t found anything like that among her papers.” While he was willing to accept Fiona might have made a case for a serial killer, Steve was reluctant on a personal level to believe the letters held a direct threat. If they did, that meant his closest male friend could be the next target. And that was a prospect that chilled him to the bone.

Fiona stared numbly at him. His words washed over her, making no impression on the worm of anxiety that wriggled inside her. “All I know is that if there is a serial killer out there, Kit is almost certainly on his list, whether or not the letter-writer and the murderer are one and the same. He fits all the criteria, just like Georgia. You’ve got to do something about this, Steve.”


Загрузка...